I have the Logitech g810. It is literally the same as the Logitech G pro but with a number pad and media keys. I personally love this keyboard not just for its style but its feel. I have had keyboards Cherry MX Brown switches and one with knockoff brown switches and I personally love the romer-g tactile switches over brown switches. If I was wanting to get a compact version of my keyboard, the Logitech G Pro would be my go to.

That said, I would say that you try it out for yourself. Logitech unfortunately doesn't distribute samples or testers of their switches like Cherry MX does. So if you want to try it out I would recommend going to a Best Buy (If there is one near you). They usually have a section of keyboards on display that you can tryout and see if it's good for you. If that is not possible, I can only suggest getting the G pro and trying it out for yourself for about a week or two. If you like it and think that it's what you are looking for, keep it. If you aren't that satisfied with it or don't like it at all, return it for a full refund. It's not the best method, but sometimes you got to work with what you got.

Makes since. In my first build almost all of my budget went to the pc and very little went into peripherals. Over time I upgraded them (mechanical keyboard, quality headset, a slightly more comfortable mouse) and when I built my second pc I kept the same peripherals. It really made my transition more smooth.

Ironically I have already replaced all of my peripherals again (this was over the span of the past 2 - 3 years so not all at once). Except this time I am certain that I will be keeping these peripherals. This time I mean it. I promise.

Nice build! And very impressive looking set up. The first picture gave me a strong since of deja vu. My first two years of college I was using a 2012 Toshiba laptop that I had gotten for a graduation present. It was seriously bare bones. Intel pentium processor and like a 500gb hdd @5400 rpm so everything was incredibly slow. Also the monitor was only 1366 x 768. Could barely play games I wanted.

For a first time build, as humorous as it is I have heard many "self error" stories that were far worse. Years ago I had a friend that had his Xbox 360 RMA'd several times only to find out that the reason why it didn't work was because he hadn't pushed the power cable into the socket in all the way.

A quad core CPU, 16 GB of RAM, SSD boot drive with 500 GB for mass storage, and an rx 580 GPU. That's a pretty cozy build for about $650. My first laptop (a Pentium cpu using integrated graphics) was just barely this much when I got it back in 2013 and I was happy to be able to play games like Oblivion and Fallout new vegas on low medium settings at 1366 x 768. If I had a pc like this, I would have been so much happier in college.

Gonna need a new motherboard for that. I've got the same CPU and I know that there is no more road to upgrade there. Would you stick with intel (maybe 8th gen, 9th...... 10th?) or would you go with AMD?

I always thought of noctua as having the worst color scheme, but damn is it not beautiful to see a build using all noctua fans. It really shows that this is more of a quality build than just a "wooow look at my RGB" type of build. Also love your selection of parts, great quality for the dollar!

Oh hell ya! I love this build! This looks awesome, I got to respect a build that someone build for someone else but this is truly epic! An i5 that runs on ddr4, ssd boot drive, 16 gb of ram (after the spike in ram prices that we suffered through that seem like a luxury), and a gtx 1070. You're a good sibling dude, and a good person. Mad respect!

Dude, I'm late for this but I love the part selection and theme of this build. I had just listened to "I'm blue" by Eiffel 65 on my way home from work and saw this build and thought "Oh hell ya! That kicks ***!." Really cool build man!